Normally only that illegal item is voided from the lease.
The landlord has many responsibilities under the law. Whether they are spelled out in the lease or not doesn't change that. The lease can add responsibilities for the landlord.
Terminate your lease if you have one or do not renew the lease unless your landlord fixes the items of which were brought to his attention.
This would depend upon the terms of the lease, but generally depend on why the landlord wants to terminate the lease. If the tenant violated the terms of the lease then the landlord can terminate the lease after proper warning or after proper notice is given. Otherwise the landlord has to wait until the lease expires and can choose not to renew.
Blank lease agreements can be downloaded at some government websites as well as some legal reference websites or landlord lease websites such as EZLandLords.
Unless you are the legal spouse of the leaseholder, it is unfortunate but, if you are not on the lease, the landlord is within their legal rights to have you move out. Ask to see if perhaps they would be willing to negotiate a lease with you.
The legal age to sign any legally binding contract is 18 in the United States of America. A lease is considered a contract between the tenant and the landlord.
He could, but it depends on the wording of the lease. Normally there is only one tenant on a lease: the rest of the legal occupants are considered part of the household. A landlord can kick out the one tenant and create a new lease for another occupant, making him the tenant.
The landlord can demand rent when it is due. Depending on the jurisdiction, they may not be able to take legal action until after 3 days but it is due when the lease says it is due. If Section 8 has not promised to pay on the due date you have in mind, it's the tenant's responsibility.
Then he or she has broken the law. Contact the police or an attorney. A lease is a legal contract and someone other than you signing your name is committing a crime.
Who's name is on the lease? Check that out and then speak to your Landlord for advice or some other legal representative
Your daughter would have no legal obligation to pay the lease, unless her name is on the lease and she was over eighteen when she signed it. Otherwise the lease you signed is not enforceable against your daughter.
The original lease (the master copy in the office) is binding. Any changes must be agreed to in writing by both parties before they are accepted as a legal modification to the lease. Doubtful that the lease is void just because the renter wrote something on it ... don't think that would hold up in a court of law.